A fake bomb inside Old Trafford that forced the abandonment of
Manchester United’s last Premier League game of the season triggered
angry calls Monday for action as the club faced a multi-million pound
bill for the “fiasco”.
As inquiries started into the incident
which led to bomb disposal experts blowing up a mobile phone attached to
a gas pipe, United vowed to reimburse the tickets of 75,000 fans who
were evacuated Sunday ahead of the game against Bournemouth.
They
will also give them free entry to Tuesday’s rearranged match against the
south-coast side. That gesture alone could cost United more than three
million pounds (3.8 million euros/$4.3 million).
Tony Lloyd, Manchester’s mayor and police and crime commissioner, said: “It is outrageous this situation arose.
“A full inquiry is required to urgently find out how this happened, why it happened and who will be held accountable.
“This
fiasco caused massive inconvenience to supporters who had come from far
and wide to watch the match, wasted the time of huge numbers of police
officers and the army’s bomb squad, and unnecessarily put people in
danger, as evacuating tens of thousands of people from a football
stadium is not without risk.”
Officials said a company which
conducted a security exercise at Old Trafford had left the fake bomb — a
mobile phone attached to a gas pipe — in a stadium toilet.
The device was found just before Sunday’s kick-off and the evacuation ordered.
Army
experts staged a “controlled explosion” before police announced that
the suspect device was “incredibly lifelike” but “wasn’t viable.”
Greater
Manchester police assistant chief constable John O’Hare said: “On
appearance this device was as real as could be, and the decision to
evacuate the stadium was the right thing to do, until we could be sure
that people were not at risk.”
United’s vice-chairman Ed Woodward said an investigation would be launched to guide “future actions and decisions.”
British media named the company that left the device in the stadium as Security Search Management and Solutions.
They said the firm had staged a training exercise for sniffer dogs at Old Trafford but left the fake bomb behind.
Christopher Reid, owner of Security Search Management, told the Daily
Mail his company was “getting the blame” for the fake bomb but refused
to make any comment until after he had spoken with Manchester United.
– Fan disappointment –
The incident left a number of spectators deeply disappointed.
About
3,500 Bournemouth fans made a 500-mile (800-kilometre) round trip to
Manchester to see their club’s first league game at Old Trafford.
Bournemouth
manager Eddie Howe told the local Daily Echo newspaper: “It was a real
anti-climax to a day everyone had been looking forward to.
“But
all those disappointments and emotions really go out of the window when
you think about the supporters and everything they have put into the day
-– financial costs, time, effort.”
Sam Stride, a United supporter
from Bristol, said: “Unbelievable. This is the first time I have been
to Old Trafford to see a game. My mate and I have known each other for
63 years and we travelled up from Bristol together. We sat in the
Stretford End for about five seconds before they asked us to leave. It’s
very disappointing.”
Sunday’s incident was United’s second
security scare of the week after their team bus was attacked by West Ham
United fans on Tuesday.
The Manchester United Supporters Trust
said it had raised the money for a fan who had travelled from Sierra
Leone to see his first Old Trafford game to get a ticket for next
Saturday’s FA Cup final against Crystal Palace at Wembley.
The trust said it had rearranged flights and found hotels for the Africa fan, named only as Moses.
Players
from the two teams were already on the pitch when the game was
cancelled and were quickly led back to the dressing rooms.
“What
happened in Old Trafford this Sunday left all of us who were there
absolutely shocked,” United’s Spanish midfielder Juan Mata wrote in a
blog on the club website.
“It helped not to spread panic around,
although all of us had a very odd feeling; something like strain mixed
with a lack of understanding.
“I feel sorry for all those people who had to go back home without watching the game,” Mata said.
“There’s been nerves and tension,” United midfielder Ander Herrera told Spanish radio of the evacuation.”

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